Marcel Schneider wrote,

> When you ask for knowing the foundations and that knowledge is persistently refused,
> you end up believing that those foundations just can’t be told.
>
> Note, too, that I readily ceased blaming UTC, and shifted the blame elsewhere, where it
> actually belongs to.

Why not think of it as a learning curve?  Early concepts and priorities were made from a lower position on that curve.  We can learn from the past and apply those lessons to the future, but a post-mortem seldom benefits the cadaver.

Minutiae about decisions made long ago probably exist, but may be presently poorly indexed/organized and difficult to search/access. As the collection of encoding history becomes more sophisticated and the searching technology becomes more civilized, it may become easier to glean information from the archives.

(OT - A little humor, perhaps...
On the topic of Francophobia, it is true that some of us do not like dead generalissimos.  But most of us adore the French for reasons beyond Brigitte Bardot and bon-bons.  Cuisine, fries, dip, toast, curls, culture, kissing, and tarts, for instance.  Not to mention cognac and champagne!)

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